Presidential candidate Donald Trump ran on the promise to bring jobs back to the US and called out companies that used foreign workers instead of Americans — but now his son’s Virginia winery is doing just that: asking the government for six workers to do seasonal work pruning grapevines.

The petition to the US Department of Labor from Trump Vineyard Estates, owned by the president-elect’s son Eric Trump, seeks temporary visas under the H-2A program for the foreign laborers who would work for about four months at the vineyard near Charlottesville doing a “variety of manual/equipment operation tasks in a vineyard operation.”

The application, filed Dec. 2, says the vineyard would pay the workers $10.72 an hour for work between January and June 2017.

The winery’s petition said the workers would be required to lift 80 pounds, would be exposed to “extreme” temperatures and the job would involve “extensive walking” and “frequent stooping.”

Trump’s winery also sought 19 temporary visas under the same program last spring. It also requested temporary visas in 2014 and 2015, ABC News reported.

The H-2A program allows American companies to bring in guest workers from abroad if they can demonstrate “there are not enough US workers who are able, willing, qualified, and available to do the temporary work,” according to US Citizenship and Immigration Services.

During his Republican presidential campaign, Donald Trump pledged to bring jobs back to the US as part of his “Make America Great Again” rallying cry.

“I’m going to bring jobs back from China, Mexico, Japan, Vietnam. They are taking our jobs. They are taking our wealth. We have $2.5 trillion offshore. We’re going to bring that money back,” he said during a presidential debate last February.

And just last week, the president-elect tweeted: “My Administration will follow two simple rules: BUY AMERICAN and HIRE AMERICAN!”

But that pledge seems to be at odds with his own actions.

In July, Trump sought foreign workers at his Mar-A-Lago resort in Florida through the same government program his son is using.

Trump petitioned to hire 78 servers, housekeepers and cooks for his Palm Beach resort and for the Trump National Jupiter, a golf course in Jupiter.

He made the same argument his son made — that he couldn’t find American workers who would take the jobs.

He defended his request to hire foreign workers at the private Florida resort during an appearance on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” in September.

“You can’t get help,” Trump said. “Getting help in Palm Beach during the season is almost impossible.”